The Official Web Site of Lou Gehrig The Official Web Site of Lou GehrigThe Official Web Site of Lou GehrigThe Official Web Site of Lou Gehrig
The Official Web Site of Lou Gehrig The Official Web Site of Lou Gehrig The Official Web Site of Lou GehrigThe Official Web Site of Lou GehrigThe Official Web Site of Lou Gehrig
The Official Web Site of Lou Gehrig About Lou The Official Web Site of Lou GehrigThe Official Web Site of Lou GehrigThe Official Web Site of Lou Gehrig
The Official Web Site of Lou Gehrig

BIOGRAPHY - Page 4

Lou Gehrig's Disease

In 1938, Gehrig fell below .300 for the first time since 1925 and it was clear that there was something wrong. He lacked his usual strength. Pitches he would have hit for home runs were only flyouts. Doctors diagnosed a gall bladder problem first, and they put him on a bland diet, which only made him weaker. Teammate Wes Ferrell noticed that on the golf course, instead of wearing golf cleats, Gehrig was wearing tennis shoes and sliding his feet along the ground. Ferrell was frightened. When asked if he would remove Gehrig from the lineup, manager Joe McCarthy said, "That's Lou's decision."

Gehrig played the first eight games of the 1939 season, but he managed only four hits. On a ball hit back to pitcher Johnny Murphy, Gehrig had trouble getting to first in time for the throw. When he returned to the dugout, his teammates complimented him on the "good play." Gehrig knew when his fellow Yankees had to congratulate him for stumbling into an average catch it was time to leave. He took himself out of the game. On May 2, 1939, as Yankee captain, he took the lineup card to the umpires, as usual. But his name was not on the roster. Babe Dahlgren was stationed at first. The game announcer intoned, "Ladies and gentlemen, Lou Gehrig's consecutive streak of 2,130 games played has ended."

Doctors at the Mayo Clinic diagnosed Gehrig with a very rare form of degenerative disease: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), which is now called Lou Gehrig's disease. There was no chance he would ever play baseball again.

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